On 2 October 2014, Alrasool Islamic Center in Salt Lake City observed Hazara Solidarity day. Salt Lake City is the capital and the most populous city in the state of Utah, which is located in in the western United States. Participants gathered in Alrasool Islamic Center, Salt Lake City.

After Maghreb prayers, Madi Hazara, a graduate student and a Fulbright scholar at University of Utah, briefed the participants about Hazara people, their culture, history and ongoing prosecution in Pakistan and in Afghanistan. The participants mostly belonging to Salt Lake City, showed their support for Hazaras who live in Pakistan.

The participants were dismayed over Government of Baluchistan for failing to curb the terrorist attacks and protecting their people.

Last but not least, the participants assured their willingness to organize and observe Hazara Solidarity day each year with zeal and vowed to invite people belonging to all walks of life. They were committed to voice their concern over killings of innocent Hazara.

]]>http://www.hazarapeople.com/2014/10/01/we-celebrate-hazara-international-solidarity-day/feed/01st October, Worldwide Hazara Solidarity day Resolutionhttp://www.hazarapeople.com/2014/10/01/1st-october-worldwide-hazara-solidarity-day-resolution/
http://www.hazarapeople.com/2014/10/01/1st-october-worldwide-hazara-solidarity-day-resolution/#commentsTue, 30 Sep 2014 22:33:11 +0000http://www.hazarapeople.com/?p=9617The Hazaras of Afghanistan
The Hazara people, one of the largest ethnic groups, live mostly in the countryside of the central highlands of Afghanistan, which are called Hazaristan or Hazarajat.

“The Hazara indigenous people made up nearly 67 percent of the population of Afghanistan prior to the 19th century.” (Hazara[1]).

From the 18th century up to now, the Hazaras have suffered discrimination and oppression. Abdul Rahman, the king of Afghanistan from 1880-1901, confiscated Hazaras’ lands and killed more than 62% of the Hazaras. During the regime of Abdul Rahman, many Hazaras fled to India (Pakistan), Iran, and other countries around the world.

In March 1995, the Taliban killed the Hazaras’ leader, Abdul Ali Mazari. And when they got control of Hazaristan, they killed a large number of the Hazara people in Mazar-e-Sharif, Bamiyan, and in other parts of Hazaristan. If they were stayed in power, they would do worse than Abdul Rahman. A popular saying among the Taliban has been, the Uzbeks should go to Uzbekistan, the Tajiks should go to Tajikistan and the Hazaras to the graveyard. “The [systematic] persecution of the Hazara was not instigated by the Taliban although more documented, but has existed for centuries where the Hazaras were driven out of their lands, sold as slaves and had a lack of access to services available to majority of the population.”(Hazara[1]).

It is obvious that the Taliban terrorists have not been completely removed from Afghanistan. Even today the Hazaras are not safe in Afghanistan. Every year, Afghan nomads, Kuchis, who are supported by the Taliban attack on Hazaristan[2], kill innocent Hazaras, and burn their houses. Most of the roads, which connect Hazaristan to the other part of countries, are controlled by the Taliban. Usually, the Taliban block the Hazaristan roads and inspect passengers and the vehicles. Up to now, more than hundreds of Hazaras who travelled to Hazaristan have been killed by the Taliban.

Most Hazaras, who live outside of Afghanistan, work for NGOs and international coalition forces, or work for the Afghan government, cannot travel to their hometowns. If they travel to Hazaristan, they would also be killed by the Taliban terrorists. Just recently, Hussain, who was deported from Australia, and Syed Habib Musawi, who came from Australia to visit his family members in Jaghori, one of the Ghazni’s districts, have been killed by the Taliban when they were traveling to Jaghori.

John Denham, Labour MP for Southampton, writes in his article that “There has been killing and forced displacement of Hazaras from Khas Uruzgan and killings and disappearances along the roads from Kabul to Bamiyan, Ghazni and Herat. Thirty Hazaras were killed three separate attacks on those highways in July 2014 alone”( Denham, [3]).

These incidents have been happening in Afghanistan while the international forces and American forces are present in there. Without a doubt, if the international forces and American forces withdraw from Afghanistan, the Taliban would come in power; then the Hazaras would confront the same situation or even worse as they had during the time of Abdul Rahman and the Taliban.
Demands

1. Because Hazaristan have been blockaded by the Taliban terrorists, it is very hard for Hazaras to travel to other parts of the country. Therefore, we ask from the new elected government of Afghanistan and coalition forces to take immediate action against the Taliban.

2. Every year Kuchis, Talibani affiliated, attack many parts of Hazaristan. We ask from the government of Afghanistan and international community to give Kuchis permanent settlements, so Taliban terrorists should not have the opportunity to use Kochis’ name, to attack on Hazaristan every year.

3. Since Afghan governments has not paid attention and no major developments have been done in Hazaristan, we ask the new government to initiate mega projects in Hazaristan, so the Hazaristan can be the same level as other parts of country.

The Hazara Genocides in Pakistan
Hazara ethno-sectarian minority makes up only 0.2 (about half a million) of about 200 million Pakistani populations. The community members dwell mostly in the Quetta; the capital city of the country’s most deprived province, Balochistan.

More than 1400 Hazaras [4] have been killed and over 3,500 have been injured, maimed and permanently disabled in and around Quetta city over last 14 years by Al-Qaeda affiliated Sunni extremist militant groups—Lashkar-e-Jangvi (LeJ), Taliban, Sipah-e-Sahaba and Jaish-ul-Islam. LeJ has been claimed responsibility for most of the gruesome attacks on Hazaras with open threats to turn Quetta city into Hazaras’ graveyard [5]. Not a single terrorist has ever been brought to justice up to date.

According to Asian Human Rights Council (Aug, 29,2012) many of these target killings have been occurred close to Pakistani security forces checkpoints. After every killing incident, the killers walk away easily and the security forces have failed to chase the killers or apprehend the culprits which has given rise to a sense of helplessness among the persecuted community.

The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan’s 2014 report [6] noted “In 2013, Pakistan became a more and more dangerous country for religious minorities.” The Minority Rights Group International’s 2014 report [7] states, “Attacks by extremist groups against Pakistan’s Shia have been on the increase since the 1980s, but targeted killings reached unprecedented levels in 2013, with some 700 Shias murdered.

Many of those killed were Hazara Shia in the province of Balochistan.” The death toll exceeded the previous high of 2012; described by Human Rights Watch as “the bloodiest year for Shias in living memory.” Minority Rights Group International’s report placed Pakistan on number 7 in the top ten unsaved countries. Moreover, Human Rights Watch’s 2014 report [1] explicitly describes the persecution and mistreatment of Hazaras in Pakistan and declared Hazara as “walking dead.”

In addition, Human Rights Watch [8] adds, “the government’s persistent failure to protect the minority Shia community from sectarian attacks by Sunni militant groups, is reprehensible and amounts to complicity in the barbaric slaughter of Pakistani citizens.”

For the last five years, over 50,000 Hazaras [9] especially the youths have fled Quetta city, and majority of them have managed to take refuge in other countries. Nearly 300 lost their lives off shores of Australia when the boats sank and disappeared.

Human Rights Commission of Pakistan [10] reports that 300 Hazara students have stopped going to (only) Balochistan University due to fear of getting killed. Most Hazara university and college lecturers [11] have either left teaching or on the long leave without pay due to their life threat.

Hazaras who were working in government or non-government offices in different parts of the Quetta city especially in the northern, southern and western areas have stopped going to their jobs because most Hazaras have been killed in those areas.

Most parts of Quetta city have now become no-go areas for Hazaras. During a session of Pakistan’s Upper House, Senator Hasil Khan Bizenjo [12] informed the house that an SMS is circulating in the provincial capital by the militants which has been asking people to inform them whenever they spot any Hazara”.

Dozens of Hazara businessmen have either been killed or abducted for the last five years. Such incidents have forced Hazara businessmen to close their businesses. In addition, customers also avoid shopping from Hazara shops in fear of being shot. Human Rights Commission of Pakistan [13] states that Hazara businessmen faced discrimination from transport companies, which they claim refused to take consignments from Hazara businessmen to different places. Hazara transporters had been targeted to force them to abandon their businesses. (p.16)

Hazaras are currently under siege in two ghettoized areas, Mehrabad and Hazara town, in Quetta City and they cannot go to schools, colleges or universities, or work freely. Other nations avoid socializing with Hazaras because they are afraid of being killed. Based on the constitution of Pakistan Article 25 and 36 which confirm the equal human rights of all Pakistanis including minorities, the government of Pakistan, provincial governments and law enforcement agencies have thoroughly failed to implement these articles.

The Supreme Court of Pakistan [14] in its judgment about the Balochistan law and order case on 12th of October 2012 verifies that the federal government failed to discharge its duty under Article 148 (3) of the Constitution of Pakistan as it should have played its role with the cooperation, coordination and hand in hand with the provincial government to control and maintain law and order in Balochistan.

In addition, the Constitution of 1973 guarantees complete religious freedom, social justice, and equality of rights to the minorities; however, the relentless 1400 killings of Hazaras signifies the failure of the present government in providing protection to minorities’ religious freedom, social justice and the equality.

“Routine targeted killings against the Hazara and other groups because of their ethnicity, religion or political affiliations raises serious questions about the will or ability of Pakistan security forces to protect the people of Balochistan” says Amnesty International [15].

DEMANDS TO THE GOVERNMENT OF PAKISTAN
In order to stop Hazara killings in Pakistan, the following demands must immediately be addressed by the Government of Pakistan.

1. The Government of Pakistan must work out a viable plan to initiate a comprehensive and rigorous targeted operation against the Al-Qaeda affiliated terrorist groups such as LeJ who roam freely in and around Quetta.

2. The Supreme Court of Pakistan should take a suo motu notice of the ongoing persecution of Hazaras and mobilize the state apparatus to bring all the perpetrators to custody.

3. Free and peaceful movement of Hazaras within the Quetta city and other parts of province should be ensured through fruitful and visible action by the security apparatus.

4. The hate campaign against the Hazaras by Ahl-e-Sunnat Wal Jama’at (ASWJ), the political wing of LeJ), should be immediately stopped and the group must be completely banned.

5. The victims and the affected families must be financially supported.

Being a member and a signatory of the United Nations it is the prime obligation of the Government of Pakistan (GoP) to implement Article 3 of the UN Declaration of Human Rights, Article 6 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, Article 5 of the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, and Article 1 of the UN Declaration on the Rights of Persons Belonging to National or Ethnic, Religious and Linguistic Minorities. The Government of Pakistan (GoP) must take effective measure to protect the Hazaras and bring the culprits to justice.

The Hazaras are concerned over the silence of the international community, human rights originations, European Union and the United Nations over the continued genocide of the Hazaras in Pakistan especially in Quetta for the last 14 years. They must come forward and force the Government of Pakistan to immediately stop the ethnic cleansing of the Hazara.

2. Hazara people. (2014 ). “Resolution Of Protest By The Hazaras Of Afghanistan And The Diaspora On The Systematic Persecution & Killing Of Hazaras In Afghanistan.” http://www.hazarapeople.com/2014/07/26/resolution-of-protest-by-the-hazaras-of-afghanistan-and-the-diaspora-on-the-systematic-persecution-killing-of-hazaras-in-afghanistan/

Stream of Deer reflects the voice of a freely-speaking poet from Hazaristan (Afghanistan), Kamran Mir Hazar. Escaping as a boy from his war-torn homeland, he grew up as a victim of ethnic prejudice in Iran. After the fall of the Taliban, Kamran returned to Afghanistan, hoping to write and publish freely. It brought him praise from liberated people, but attacks from fundamentalists and arrests from the government. He fled with his wife to India, but was forced to leave, and finally granted political asylum in Norway. These poems are part of his story and perception of life as a Hazara.

Poems translated by Marta Núñez Pouzols are from Choros De Ciervos translated by Manuel Llinás and Rafael Patiño Góez.

]]>http://www.hazarapeople.com/2014/07/12/stream-of-deer-poems/feed/0The Anti-Apartheid Leader’s Farewellhttp://www.hazarapeople.com/2013/12/06/the-anti-apartheid-leaders-farewell/
http://www.hazarapeople.com/2013/12/06/the-anti-apartheid-leaders-farewell/#commentsFri, 06 Dec 2013 01:10:29 +0000http://www.hazarapeople.com/?p=9305Hazara People International Network:The world has lost a great man of our time today; a man who spent his life time fighting for justice and equality.As one of the most oppressed ethnic group in the world, the Hazaras value Mandela’s struggles for peace and justice as they have been the victims of injustice and apartheid for centuries in Afghanistan.

Mandela has spread the message of justice with reconciliation and compassion in the worldwide level and he has been a symbol and an inspiration for many anti-apartheid movements in the world.

He has not died but went for eternity. May his soul be in peace in the heavens.

On Thursday February 21, 2013 a peaceful protest and a candlelight vigil were held in front of CNN’s headquarters, Atlanta Georgia USA, protesting the genocide of the Hazara people. The protest ran from 5PM to 6:15PM, with the vigil following from 6:15PM to 7:00PM. This demonstration was held during downtown Atlanta’s afternoon rush hour to attract the most attention of passers-by.

More than 45 people attended this demonstration, including women, children, and sympathetic Americans. Karla Bradbury, an American who was one of the event’s organizers added, “I have many Afghan friends who live in Afghanistan, Australia and now in Atlanta. My heart breaks for the victims and families. As human beings we are all family and we must stand together against violence and embrace love and peace as the answer.” And a local community activist and artist Odijie Bopniface attended, saying, “Let us not close our eyes acting like we do not see innocent Hazara people die.

Let us join hands and do anything humanely possible to stop these senseless killings. We are all one—same human being, despite our culture, tribe or ethnicity. It is sad and heart-broken to wake up and watch our loved ones gone, taken by untimely death. We must stand up and take it as our duty to protect the sanctity of human life, since we cannot make or create one.

I, therefore, use this opportunity to call on all the above to kindly help the Hazaras and stop the killings.” Over all, the reason to this demonstration was to show our sympathy to the victims’ families who lost their loved ones, and to send this message to them that we are with you.

]]>http://www.hazarapeople.com/2013/02/19/protest-against-hazara-killing-in-atlanta-georgia-usa/feed/0World-wide Protest: Declaration Against Hazara Genocide In Pakistanhttp://www.hazarapeople.com/2013/02/19/world-wide-protest-declaration-against-hazara-genocide-in-pakistan/
http://www.hazarapeople.com/2013/02/19/world-wide-protest-declaration-against-hazara-genocide-in-pakistan/#commentsTue, 19 Feb 2013 00:49:10 +0000http://www.hazarapeople.com/?p=8894At least 92 members of Hazara died, including some 20 women and 18 children, more than 200 sustained serious injuries and 30 people gone missing when a bombed ripped through a densely populated fruit market situated in Hazara Town, a Hazara enclave, in Quetta on Saturday, 16 February, 2013. It happened just 38 days after a similar organized attack on Alamdar Road, another Hazara enclave, claimed over a hundred lives.

More than 1100 Hazaras have been killed over last one decade in Pakistan’s largest province, Balochistan, by Al-Qaeda-cum-Taliban linked militant groups such as Lashkar-e-Jangvi (LeJ) and its affiliates under the very nose of the government and it’s law enforcement agencies.

The state of Pakistan; the elected government, law enforcement agencies and an otherwise hyperactive judiciary, has blatantly failed to protect the ethno-sectarian minority in Quetta. Inaction of the security forces against the terrorist outfits has resulted to a serious perception that they are complicit in the genocide of Hazaras in Balochistan. Such concerns have been raised by a number of human rights organizations, including Human Rights Watch (HRW) and Amnesty International.

The acting Governor of Balochistan province, Nawab Zulfiqar Magsi, has confessed that “the terrorist attack on the Hazara community in Quetta is a failure of the intelligence and security forces”. However, we believe that terrorists groups such as Lashkar-e-Jangvi (LeJ) operate under the patronage of the country’s military establishment and it’s intelligence agencies which is evident from the fact, among others, that a handful of killers succeed to launch terror attacks on Hazaras repeatedly without being apprehended or even chased. We, therefore, stage a world-wide hunger strike unless our demands are met:

1: Declare a state of emergency regarding the Hazara state of affairs, as authorized by the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.
2: Apply diplomatic pressure on Pakistani government to immediately cease acts of discrimination against the Hazara and to stop supporting terrorist groups who commit violent acts against them.
3: Ask the Refugee Convention’s state parties to protect Hazara asylum seekers and grant them asylum.
4: Establish an international truth Commission to investigate crimes against the Hazara.
5: Open comprehensive cases concerning genocide and gross human rights violations in international courts such as the ICC.
6: Appeal to international media to investigate and report on activities against the Hazara, particularly in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

About 70 people, mostly part of an Edmonton coalition of Shia and Sunni mosques and community organizations, condemned the U.N., international media, and the Pakistani government for inaction on what they call an ongoing genocide.

About 100 Pakistanis, mostly Hazara Shias, were killed last week after two bomb attacks on a billiard club in the city of Quetta. It was one incident in a string of violent attacks on the minority group.

Demonstrator Bani Turkmani said Hazaras are being singled out and killed because they are a visible ethnic group, though Shia Muslims at large have also been targeted.

“In Pakistan, the Hazara people have been under target killing. As soon as they see a person that looks like Chinese looking or Asian looking, they’re being killed,” said Turkmani, who is a Muslim Hazara.

Turkmani’s uncle owns a shop in Quetta that was targeted in one of the attacks. She said most of the protestors in Churchill Square Sunday have recently lost a friend or family member to a violent attack targeting Hazara Shias.

“The systematic genocide of the Hazaras occurring in Pakistan has left over 1,000, including women and children, dead and more than 2,000 wounded,” she said, adding many Hazara students and professors in Pakistan have stopped attending school in fear of being killed.

She is calling on the U.N. and the international community to protect the Hazara people, and on the Pakistani government to prosecute the terrorists carrying out the attacks.

“I’m so fortunate to have this peaceful life. I’m living a beautiful life in this beautiful country,” she said. “I’d like everyone to have this.”

Protestors in Quetta have been blocking roads with the coffins of their relatives who were killed in recent explosions.

Many of the attacks have been carried out by terrorist groups like Lashkar-e-Jhangvi that are affiliated with al-Qaeda and the Taliban. Demonstrator Sabira Devjee, who identifies as Muslim, called on people of all faith groups to band together and condemn the killing of innocent people.

“We’re here to condemn all genocide. We’re all human beings,” she said.

“As people, we need to come together. It does not matter what faith group you belong to.”